Two
weeks to go to the global climate strike. The
demonstrations on Sept. 20 will kick off a week of action that
coincides with a United Nations climate summit in New York City. Xiye
Bastida of Fridays For Future NYC explained that the global strike on
Sept. 20 "isn't a goal, it's a catalyst for future action. It's
a catalyst for the engagement of humanity in the protection of
Earth," Bastida continued. "It's a catalyst for realizing
the intersectionality that the climate crisis has with every other
issue. It's a catalyst for the culmination of hundreds of climate
activists who won't stop fighting until the climate emergency is
over."
Future
Coalition executive director Katie Eder said Friday that "our
message will be clear—we must act now to avoid the worst effects of
climate change because all of our lives depend upon it. We are the
new face of the climate revolution and we demand just and equitable
climate action."
To
profit as much as possible from fossil fuels before markets fall
under the weight of climate chaos and better alternatives, industry
and its allies tell us fracked gas is a climate solution. It’s not.
A new study shows it’s as bad as or worse for the climate than other
fossil fuels. Cornell University researchers found alarming increases
in atmospheric methane since 2008 can likely be pinned on the U.S.
shale oil and gas boom.
Cornell
professor Robert
Howarth maintains
methane
emissions from the (mostly fracked) natural gas industry are much
higher than industry and government report. Research
by the David Suzuki Foundation and St. Francis Xavier University
found
that’s the case in B.C. Other researchers conclude methane
emissions are underreported
in Alberta.
Methane
is a potent greenhouse gas
responsible for one-quarter of current global heating. It only stays
in the atmosphere for about 12 years before it breaks down and gets
reabsorbed into natural systems, but it causes a lot of damage while
it’s there. It traps heat at a rate close to 85 times higher than
carbon dioxide over 20 years. CO2 not absorbed by vegetation and
oceans — where it causes acidification and other problems — can
remain in the atmosphere for thousands of years.
Apart
from plant- and animal-based sources, it’s also produced by leaks
and “flaring” during fossil fuel development, especially
fracking. He
concludes that “shale-gas production in North America over the past
decade may have contributed more than half of all of the increased
methane emissions from fossil fuels globally and approximately
one-third of the total increased emissions from all sources globally
over the past decade.”
Because
methane only remains in the atmosphere for a short period but has
enormous impact, reducing or eliminating methane emissions is a
quick, effective way to lessen the threat of climate chaos. Yet the
inordinate amount of power the fossil fuel industry holds over many
governments means there’s little appetite to even admit there’s a
problem, let alone solve it. The U.S. government is reversing
regulation of methane leaks from oil and gas.
The
cause of our climate cries is our economic system. Capitalism exists
on commercial growth and market expansion to accumulate more and more
capital and acquire increased profits. It misuses the world’s
resources, creates needless waste and produces pollution. What is the
environmentalist progressive answer to this? It refuses to
acknowledge the problem. The Green New Deal, government's measures
to legislate and regulate capitalism. Although highlighting the
ecological problems of the current economic system it does not offer
genuine a practical plan to end the economic problems producing
climate change.The environmentalist rhetoric is based upon
low-carbon lifestyles for all and ethical calls for investors to use
their money for sustainable ends in a green capitalism run on
renewables, where there will be employment for all, with workers on
shorter hours and in high-paid green jobs and democratised
workplaces. Thus the Green New Deal reveals its failure to confront
the political and economic realities of the capitalist system. It is
this system that is driving the planet to climatic catastrophes.
Going against what motors capitalists, will result in recession,
putting companies out of business, creating the hardships of
unemployment and cuts in social services. The ruling class are unable
to keep the economy functioning and solve climate breakdown at the
same time. The Green New Deal perpetuates the laws of
capitalism. Its proponents do not understand the basic
characteristics of how capitalism works. Well-meaning reformers with
good intentions cannot cure climate change. The Green New Dealers do
not offer a feasible plan. The climate crisis is not a simple problem
of government policy; it’s a problem of capitalism. There are
inescapable economic and political consequences of capitalism that
drives global warming. The Green New Deal or any other similar
programme – spells disaster and possible runaway climate change.
The
Green New Deal maintains the fundamental relationships of the
capitalist economic system, and is incompatible with any sustainable
green future. The climate crisis should wake us all up to fake
solutions and false promises. We need to rethink the nature of
society that we seek for real solutions and reconsider. We cannot
trust to blindly put our faith in political parties. We have
desperately little time left to avoid total social collapse and must
begin organising immediately. Revolution can win the survival of
humanity on this planet. Business-as-usual cannot continue. Wake up,
people, and understand why we suffer unnecessarily.
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